Middle East Eye just published my latest piece. For some reason, they published an earlier, shorter draft of the article. This was meant as the final version for publication:

It’s no secret that President Trump’s administration has been an abject failure in terms of legislative accomplishment. Every one of the supposed hallmarks of his agenda has failed when brought before Congress; including the repeal of the Obama healthcare plan, the building of a wall with Mexico, restrictions on immigration and repeal of the Dreamer Act, and tax reform (so far). Because of these failures, he has largely had to resort to executive orders to implement many of these campaign pledges.

The problem with such directives is that they are only in force during the term of the president who signs them. They have no power once that person leaves office. That means that the orders themselves do not provide a legacy that will continue after the next president is elected. That is but one of the many differences between Donald Trump and his predecessor, Barack Obama (whose list of legislative accomplishments was long, though he too resorted to executive orders when necessary).

Trump’s approach to Iran has also been an utter failure. He talks a good game, mimicking the bellicose rhetoric of his ally, Bibi Netanyahu. He called the nuclear deal shepherded into existence by Obama and his European allies the worst deal in history. He promised to undo it the first chance he got.

But when push came to shove, he backed down. Required to certify Iranian compliance every three months, he did so twice. On the third go-round, he punted. He refused to certify Iranian compliance despite the determination by every relevant major power and international body that Iran was complying. This set in motion a political process which offered Congress 60 days to determine whether to impose new sanctions upon Iran.

But a strange thing has happened in the course of the transition from the presidency of Obama to Trump. The Republican Party shifted from being the opposition to being the ruling party (in European terms). As a result, the Party which had railed against the nuclear deal and sabotaged it at every opportunity under Obama, suddenly became a semi-responsible adult. GOP leaders realized that they could no longer blame Obama for failure of the deal or for Iran’s building a nuclear weapon. In the current circumstances, they would be blamed if that happened.

Suddenly, GOP senators weren’t as keen to blow it up. When faced with the prospect of imposing new sanctions, breaking off from our European partners who remained committed to it, and losing major commercial deals like the Boeing airplane sale, the Republicans hit the pause button.

Sens. Tom Cotton and Bob Corker plot to blow up Iran nuclear deal. Tom’s ready to fight ’em on the beaches! As they say in the South: he’s all hat and no cotton!

Another obstacle is U.S. public opinion, which strongly favors the nuclear deal. A recent CNN poll found that 67% of Americans favor it and only 27% feel the country should withdraw. Further, only 30% of Americans believe that Iran poses a threat to the U.S. That’s down from nearly 50% in 2015. That’s the smallest percentage since polling began on this question in 2000.

In addition, Trump faces another possible Congressional obstacle: the chair of the Senate foreign relations committee is Sen. Bob Corker. He and the president have been sparring angrily with each other via media interviews and Twitter for weeks. The likelihood Corker will spearhead a legislative attack on the nuclear deal appears slim.

Draft legislation responding to U.S. President Donald Trump’s refusal to certify the Iran nuclear deal would set tough new terms for the pact, including restoring sanctions if Iran tests a ballistic missile able to carry a warhead or bars nuclear inspectors from any sites.

If passed, the bill would torpedo the deal, or at least U.S. participation in it. The P5+1 agreement says nothing about Iran missile testing. It is fully compatible with the deal’s provisions. Nor does it permit nuclear inspectors to visit any site at will. In fact, there are some military sites which are off-limits, or to which Iran offers limited access. These sites are known to IAEA and it has not objected to these conditions.

According to Reuters, Corker has been consulting with Democratic colleagues in an attempt to turn this charade into a bipartisan effort. I strongly doubt he will have success. Nor do I believe that overall this legislation can pass. Republicans will need 12 Democratic votes to attain the 60-vote majority necessary to avoid filibuster. The chances of attaining this are slim.

Israeli Security Hawks Support Iran Deal

Though Israel’s leadership continued to bray against the nuclear deal, Israeli security hawks like Uzi Arad and Ehud Barak came to Washington and told legislators that the deal was one Israel could live with comfortably. Even more important, they told them that the prospect of having no deal in place was terrifying in terms of where it might lead.

Though it’s a dangerous game to predict what may happen when Congress does take up the deal since the Trump presidency has been one of the most erratic and unpredictable in U.S. history, it seems unlikely that the U.S. Congress will devise a coherent legislative response to Trump’s decertification. It knows that if it strangles the deal with a host of punitive sanctions it will likely result in Iran terminating the agreement. The Iranian leadership has made clear that it will resume its nuclear program in that event. This in turn would mean the likelihood of Iran either developing WMD or the capacity to produce one quickly if necessary (much like Japan’s nuclear posture). The result would be a disaster for the Republicans who would take the blame for this failure.

Though the Republicans have not been known for their ability to see beyond the next news cycle, even they can look far enough into the future to see that this is a prospect that would delight Democrats, who would tar and feather their opponents.

Though this is by no means a conventional political situation, even Republicans have to admit that they have enough headaches with other items in their failed agenda that they don’t need yet another by torpedoing the nuclear deal.

There is, of course, a possibility that the Republican Congress will leap like lemmings over the cliff and pass new sanctions and reinstate those removed by the P5+1 agreement. They have, after all, tried not once, twice, but four times and failed to overturn ACA. And there is a sizable chunk of their constituency which supports regime change against Iran and would delight in junking the nuclear agreement. It would be a nihilistic approach, but this does seem to be the Age of Nihilism in Washington these days.

If the U.S. backs out of the deal it will mean disaster for our Iran policy. The rest of the P5 nations (Germany, France, Britain, Russia and China) will reaffirm their commitment to it. They will continue both removing sanctions and signing record commercial deals with Iran. They will also resume buying Iranian oil, one of the country’s main exports. Here in the U.S., we will be left out in the cold. The only forces happy with this outcome will be the hardliners both in the U.S. Congress and Iran.

Nonetheless, it appears more likely Congress will do what Trump did: step up to the brink and blink. They will pick a path that appears to show resolve against Iran without having much substance or teeth. Perhaps they will tighten existing sanctions or introduce new ones. At worst, they will tinker. But they will take no decisive action that would cause a fatal rupture with our allies and an Iranian nuclear breakout.

This is an administration that governs not with a bang, but a whimper.

Good piece. Thank you. I don’t see how the other countries that are a part of this Iran deal can maintain it if the US violates it by imposing sanctions and Iran then makes good on it’s threat to resume it’s nuclear program. I think Iran has said that if the US leaves, it will kill the deal. I may be wrong about that but still how does this deal survive without the US?

@ Potter: No, I don’t think the U.S. ending its participation in the deal would kill it. But it will severely strain relations with our allies, who want to remain in it. Is the U.S. prepared to slap sanctions on our allies when they defy us & conduct commercial relations with Iran? I don’t know how we could enforce that without harming our own economy & driving our allies even farther away than they already are.

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October 29, 2017 12:29 AM

Colin Wright

‘…Nonetheless, it appears more likely Congress will do what Trump did: step up to the brink and blink…’

I’m not as optimistic as you are. For one, it’s very noticeable that while the media promptly attacks almost anything Trump does, there’s a sudden and very conspicuous lessening in the volume of abuse whenever it’s a matter of a move against Iran. Rather comically, the criticism suddenly becomes at most reasoned and measured, and more usually, absent entirely.

I think we’re still being frog-marched into a war with Iran. Regardless of what the polls say now, all it’ll take is a staged bomb outrage or two and an orchestrated media response, and we’ll be there.

…and boy, will ‘there’ turn out to be a bad place to be. We’ll be sorree…

Not that that will do our victims much good.

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October 28, 2017 10:43 AM

Eli

It was probably not known when the article was written but Trump found the perfect way to stick it to the Iranians. If the missiles aren’t part of the agreement than putting sanctions b/c of them doesn’t violate the agreement as are sanctions for assisting Hizbullah.

@ Eli: No buddy. You’re no Albert Einstein. You can’t initiate new sanctions that fall outside the scope of the original deal. Neither the P5 allies nor Iran will accept it & it will destroy the deal & result in total opprobrium for the U.S. But hey, let Trump do his worst & you can join him in Hell, which is where he’s headed (either literally or figuratively).

The notion that Donald Trump is smart or does anything smart is beyond ridiculous.

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